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Topic: What should I do with this Roth IRA? (Read 1355 times)

I have about $1500 in a Roth IRA with Domini, in their Social Equity Fund. It's pretty old and I don't contribute to it anymore, since we're working toward maxing out my husband's 401K instead.

Since learning more about investing here I'd rather the Roth be in a low-fee index fund. What would you do with this money? Can I roll it over into a Vanguard fund, even though there's only $1500 in it?

You can buy shares for a minimum of $1,000 in Vanguard Target Retirement Funds, and the STAR fund. The ER is a whole lot less than 1.2%.

If it were me, I'd pick the Target Retirement fund that most closely aligned with my target asset allocation, and use that, at least until I had 3K when I might switch to a life-strategy fund if so desired, or large enough to take advantage of Admiral shares.

You can buy shares for a minimum of $1,000 in Vanguard Target Retirement Funds, and the STAR fund. The ER is a whole lot less than 1.2%.

If it were me, I'd pick the Target Retirement fund that most closely aligned with my target asset allocation, and use that, at least until I had 3K when I might switch to a life-strategy fund if so desired, or large enough to take advantage of Admiral shares.

Thanks! Is Vanguard really that much better than Fidelity? My DH's 401K & profit sharing plan are both with Fidelity, so it would be easier to have it all in one place. Though it's not THAT big of a deal...

Vanguard is the gold standard for index investing and they are awesome. No one is debating that. You can't go wrong using them for any of your accounts.

That being said, you can do index investing with Fidelity as long as you stick to their Spartan series of funds, which contain comparable funds to what Vanguard offers. You just need to avoid managed funds and paying for any professional level management of your accounts themselves if you go Fido. (I have all my portfolio with Fidelity and am perfectly happy).

And if you want to move your old Roth over to Vanguard or Fidelity, you really just need to call them up and ask how. It is pretty easy - you open a Roth IRA with them (it will be empty, but you need the account all set up ready to go) then you fill out some really basic paperwork about where the current account is, how you want the funds/money to transfer - "in kind" meaning it comes over with all the investments as they currently are set up, or direct them to sell all funds and transfer the cash over. Then you send the form to Vanguard (or Fido), and they take care of the rest. It can take several weeks, but once your money is moved over, you can decide how you want to invest it going forward (sell off everything if transferred in kind, or just jump in).

And for the record, you can contribute to a Roth IRA (up to $5,500 per year as of now) even if you have a 401k or other retirement account through work in many cases. There are income limits - if you make $183,000 or less you should be good - and your spouse can also have their own Roth (or traditional) IRA as well, meaning you can add in an additional $11K a year to what you're socking away for retirement (early or otherwise).